The Persistence Layer with Spring 3.1 and JPA
1. Overview
This is tutorial shows how to set up Spring with JPA, using Hibernate as a persistence provider.
For a step by step introduction about setting up the Spring context using Java based configuration and the basic Maven pom for the project, see this article.
2. The JPA Spring Configuration with Java
To use JPA in a Spring project, the EntityManager needs to be set up.
This is the main part of the configuration – and it is done via a Spring factory bean – either the simpler LocalEntityManagerFactoryBean or the more flexible LocalContainerEntityManagerFactoryBean. The latter option is used here, so that additional properties can be configured on it:
@Configuration @EnableTransactionManagement public class PersistenceJPAConfig{ @Bean public LocalContainerEntityManagerFactoryBean entityManagerFactoryBean() { LocalContainerEntityManagerFactoryBean em = new LocalContainerEntityManagerFactoryBean(); em.setDataSource(dataSource()); em.setPackagesToScan(new String[] { "org.baeldung.persistence.model" }); JpaVendorAdapter vendorAdapter = new HibernateJpaVendorAdapter(); em.setJpaVendorAdapter(vendorAdapter); em.setJpaProperties(additionalProperties()); return em; } @Bean public DataSource dataSource(){ DriverManagerDataSource dataSource = new DriverManagerDataSource(); dataSource.setDriverClassName("com.mysql.jdbc.Driver"); dataSource.setUrl("jdbc:mysql://localhost:3306/spring_jpa"); dataSource.setUsername( "tutorialuser" ); dataSource.setPassword( "tutorialmy5ql" ); return dataSource; } @Bean public PlatformTransactionManager transactionManager(){ JpaTransactionManager transactionManager = new JpaTransactionManager(); transactionManager.setEntityManagerFactory( entityManagerFactoryBean().getObject() ); return transactionManager; } @Bean public PersistenceExceptionTranslationPostProcessor exceptionTranslation(){ return new PersistenceExceptionTranslationPostProcessor(); } Properties additionalProperties() { return new Properties() { { // Hibernate Specific: setProperty("hibernate.hbm2ddl.auto", "create-drop"); setProperty("hibernate.dialect", "org.hibernate.dialect.MySQL5Dialect"); } }; } }
Also, note that, before Spring 3.2, cglib had to be on the classpath for Java @Configuration classes to work; to better understand the need for cglib as a dependency, see this discussion about the cglib artifact in Spring.
3. The JPA Spring Configuration with XML
The same Spring Configuration with XML:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <beans xmlns="http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xmlns:tx="http://www.springframework.org/schema/tx" xsi:schemaLocation=" http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans/spring-beans-3.2.xsd http://www.springframework.org/schema/tx http://www.springframework.org/schema/tx/spring-tx-3.2.xsd"> <bean id="myEmf" class="org.springframework.orm.jpa.LocalContainerEntityManagerFactoryBean"> <property name="dataSource" ref="dataSource" /> <property name="packagesToScan" value="org.baeldung.persistence.model" /> <property name="jpaVendorAdapter"> <bean class="org.springframework.orm.jpa.vendor.HibernateJpaVendorAdapter" /> </property> <property name="jpaProperties"> <props> <prop key="hibernate.hbm2ddl.auto">create-drop</prop> <prop key="hibernate.dialect">org.hibernate.dialect.MySQL5Dialect</prop> </props> </property> </bean> <bean id="dataSource" class="org.springframework.jdbc.datasource.DriverManagerDataSource"> <property name="driverClassName" value="com.mysql.jdbc.Driver" /> <property name="url" value="jdbc:mysql://localhost:3306/spring_jpa" /> <property name="username" value="tutorialuser" /> <property name="password" value="tutorialmy5ql" /> </bean> <bean id="transactionManager" class="org.springframework.orm.jpa.JpaTransactionManager"> <property name="entityManagerFactory" ref="myEmf" /> </bean> <tx:annotation-driven /> <bean id="persistenceExceptionTranslationPostProcessor" class="org.springframework.dao.annotation.PersistenceExceptionTranslationPostProcessor" /> </beans>
There is a relatively small difference between the way Spring is configured in XML and the new Java based configuration – in XML, a reference to another bean can point to either the bean or a bean factory for that bean. In Java however, since the types are different, the compiler doesn’t allow it, and so the EntityManagerFactory is first retrieved from it’s bean factory and then passed to the transaction manager:
txManager.setEntityManagerFactory( this.entityManagerFactoryBean().getObject() );
4. Going full XML-less
Usually JPA defines a persistence unit through the META-INF/persistence.xml file. Starting with Spring 3.1, the persistence.xml is no longer necessary – the LocalContainerEntityManagerFactoryBean now supports a ‘packagesToScan’ property where the packages to scan for @Entity classes can be specified.
This file was the last piece of XML to be removed – now, JPA can be fully set up with no XML.
4.1. The JPA Properties
JPA properties would usually be specified in the persistence.xml file; alternatively, the properties can be specified directly to the entity manager factory bean:
factoryBean.setJpaProperties( this.additionalProperties() );
As a side-note, if Hibernate would be the persistence provider, then this would be the way to specify Hibernate specific properties.
5. The Maven configuration
In addition to Spring Core and persistence dependencies – show in detail in the Spring with Maven tutorial – we also need to define JPA and Hibernate in the project, as well as a MySQL connector:
<dependency> <groupId>org.hibernate</groupId> <artifactId>hibernate-entitymanager</artifactId> <version>4.2.4.Final</version> <scope>runtime</scope> </dependency> <dependency> <groupId>mysql</groupId> <artifactId>mysql-connector-java</artifactId> <version>5.1.26</version> <scope>runtime</scope> </dependency>
Note that the MySQL dependency is included as a reference – a driver is needed to configure the datasource, but any Hibernate supported database will do.
6. Conclusion
This tutorial illustrated how to configure JPA with Hibernate in Spring using both XML and Java configuration.
We also discussed how to get rid of the last piece of XML usually associated with JPA – the persistence.xml. The final result is a lightweight, clean DAO implementation, with almost no compile-time reliance on Spring.
The implementation of this Spring JPA Tutorial can be found in the github project – this is an Eclipse based project, so it should be easy to import and run as it is.